Here’s the truth almost no one tells new students: the first class is the easy part. You show up nervous, you survive it, you feel a little proud, and you go home sore and buzzing. The part that actually decides whether you become a jiu-jitsu person happens over the next three months — quietly, on the ordinary Tuesday nights when the newness has worn off and the progress hasn’t shown up yet.
The vast majority of people who ever quit jiu-jitsu do so inside their first 90 days. Not because they got hurt or hated it, but because nobody handed them a map of what those first weeks actually feel like — so when it felt hard and slow and humbling, they assumed something was wrong with them. This is that map. Read it before you start, or early on, and you’ll recognize each stage as it comes instead of mistaking it for a reason to leave.
Month 1: Just survive, and learn how to move
Your only job in month one is to keep coming back. That’s it. You are not here to win, to look good, or to “get” anything quickly. You’re here to get comfortable being uncomfortable.
The dominant feeling of your first few weeks will be helplessness. Everyone seems to get on top of you and you can’t get out; you’ll feel like you have no skills at all, like a fish on land. We want to be very clear about this: that feeling is not a sign this sport isn’t for you. It’s the normal, expected, universal white-belt experience. Even the great coaches say so — John Danaher, one of the most respected teachers in the sport, describes the beginner’s job in exactly these terms: not to win, but to survive. Learn not to lose before you learn how to win.
In practice, month one is mostly about learning to move. A typical class opens with ten or fifteen minutes of warm-ups — basic movements that build the coordination jiu-jitsu runs on. Those shrimping, bridging, and rolling drills feel awkward and pointless at first. They aren’t. They’re the alphabet. The elbow escape — the movement you use to slip out from under someone — is one of the first and most important things you’ll learn, and it starts in those warm-ups. Give them your full attention and you’re already ahead.
One more thing that will carry you through month one and every month after: tap early, tap often. A tap just means “you got me, let’s reset.” It costs you nothing. Refusing to tap because your ego doesn’t want to lose is how people pop joints and tear ligaments over a position that didn’t matter — and every injury is a reason someone quits for good. In a healthy room, everybody taps; black belts tap to white belts in training and think nothing of it. Leave the ego at the door and you’ll still be training years from now.
Month 2: The danger month — start reading the map
If month one is survival, month two is where most people quietly disappear. The novelty has faded. You’ve been tapped a hundred times, sometimes by people smaller or older than you, and the sting of that — the ego damage — is real. Meanwhile your progress is invisible: you’ll fail the same technique dozens of times before it ever works on someone who’s resisting. It’s easy to look around at everyone who seems better than you and conclude you’re just not built for this.
Here’s what’s actually happening, though, underneath the frustration: you’re starting to read the map. Somewhere in month two, positions stop being one big blur of arms and legs. You begin to recognize where you are — okay, I’m in side control, I’m under mount, my guard is being passed — even if you can’t do much about it yet. Recognition comes before escape, and escape comes before offense. That quiet shift from total chaos to “I know what this position is called and what’s supposed to happen next” is enormous progress. It just doesn’t feel like progress, because you’re comparing yourself to people with years of mat time instead of to the version of you from four weeks ago.
Most quitters leave silently in exactly this window — a friendly goodbye at the door after a class, and they simply never come back. So this is the month to lean on the room instead of your own head. Talk to your coaches; tell them what’s frustrating you. Make a friend or two on the mat. Remind yourself why you walked in the first place. The students who get through month two almost never do it on willpower alone — they do it because they felt connected to the place and the people.
Month 3: The first small wins
Push through the hump and month three is where jiu-jitsu starts giving something back. It’s usually not a highlight-reel submission. It’s smaller and better than that: you escape a pin you couldn’t escape last month. You hold your guard for thirty seconds against someone who used to pass it instantly. You survive a full round with a training partner who used to steamroll you.
These are the wins the sport is actually built on, and they line up perfectly with the survive-first mindset. Your early progress shows up as defense — getting harder to control, harder to submit, harder to beat — long before it shows up as offense. That’s not a lesser kind of progress. It’s the foundation everything else gets built on. The flashy stuff comes later, once you’ve learned to stay alive long enough to use it.
Reach the far side of these first three months and the odds tip hard in your favor. The students who make it to roughly the four-month mark tend to stay for years. You’ll have gone from drowning, to reading the water, to swimming a little — and that’s the exact stretch almost everyone who quits never gets to see. The hardest part will be behind you.
Come train with us
Nobody starts a black belt, and nobody skips the awkward, humbling, slow-feeling early months — not your coaches, not the toughest person in the room, not anyone. The only real difference between the people still training and the people who left is that the ones who stayed knew month two was coming and kept showing up anyway. Your first class with us is free. Come find out what the first ninety days actually feel like — we’ll be there for every one of them, and we’ll make sure you never have to guess whether what you’re feeling is normal. It is.